Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

1Container Recycling Institute 2007 Updating the Bottle Bill A Public Forum Hartford, Connecticut March 6, 2007 Pat Franklin Executive Director Container.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "1Container Recycling Institute 2007 Updating the Bottle Bill A Public Forum Hartford, Connecticut March 6, 2007 Pat Franklin Executive Director Container."— Presentation transcript:

1 1Container Recycling Institute 2007 Updating the Bottle Bill A Public Forum Hartford, Connecticut March 6, 2007 Pat Franklin Executive Director Container Recycling Institute

2 Container Recycling Institute 2007 2 Times have changed.

3 3Container Recycling Institute 2007 Refillable bottles were used many times. A small “ refundable deposit ” ensured their return. They were washed, refilled, and resold.

4 4Container Recycling Institute 2007 In 1930 the one-way, throwaway can was introduced

5 5Container Recycling Institute 2007 Source: Can and Bottle Bills, CalPIRG, 1981; 1986 Statistical Profile, National Soft Drink Association,1986 and 2002.

6 6Container Recycling Institute 2007 Scenes like this (minus the non-carbonated beverage bottles) prompted activists and legislators to pass container deposit laws.

7 7Container Recycling Institute 2007 The U.S. beverage packaging market continues to change.

8 8Container Recycling Institute 2007  Today one-way, no-return cans and bottles are the norm in America.  Plastic is increasing as a percent of rigid beverage container market share (35% in 2005.)  The vast majority (about 75%) of non- carbonated rigid beverage containers are plastic. Fewer than 1 in 5  Fewer than 1 in 5 non-carbonated plastic beverage bottles are recycled.

9 9Container Recycling Institute 2007 What a difference a deposit makes! 53% 10% 34% 15% Percent Source: “2002 National Post-Consumer Plastics Recycling Report.” R.W. Beck, Inc. for the American Plastics Council. 1994 – 2004. Recycling Rates: PET Soda and PET Non-Carb & Food Bottles

10 10Container Recycling Institute 2007 The beverage market has changed in other ways. Non-carbonated beverages, that did not exist in the 1970 ’ s and early 1980 ’ s when most bottle bills were enacted, are growing in both volume and units sold.

11 11Container Recycling Institute 2007 WaterWaterEverywhere

12 12Container Recycling Institute 2007 The Changing Beverage Market Source: “ Beverage Packaging in the US, ” Beverage Marketing Corporation, 2006. Billions of Units

13 13Container Recycling Institute 2007 Plastic Bottled Water Sales in Connecticut (Bottles under 1 gallon) Millions of Units Source: Data compiled by CRI using “ Beverage Packaging in the US, ” Beverage Marketing Corporation, 2006; Beverage World, June 2003 and May 2006; and U.S. Census Bureau.

14 14Container Recycling Institute 2007 Non-Carbonated Beverage Sales in CT, 2005 (Containers 1 gallon and under) Bottled Water 447 Sports Drinks 39 Fruit Beverages 136 Ready to Drink Tea 56 Energy Drinks 19 Total Non-Carbs 697 Source: Data compiled by CRI using “ Beverage Packaging in the US, ” Beverage Marketing Corporation, 2006; Beverage World, June 2003 and May 2006; and U.S. Census Bureau.

15 15Container Recycling Institute 2007 Non-Carbonated Beverage Containers as a % of all Beverage Containers Sold in Connecticut in 2005 Source: Data compiled by CRI using “ Beverage Packaging in the US, ” Beverage Marketing Corporation, 2006; Beverage World, June 2003 and May 2006; and U.S. Census Bureau.

16 16Container Recycling Institute 2007

17 17Container Recycling Institute 2007 Voluntary Systems are Inadequate Percent Source: BioCycle, American Plastics Council, Aluminum Association, US Chamber of Commerce

18 18Container Recycling Institute 2007 Declining Value of a Nickel

19 19Container Recycling Institute 2007 Beverage Containers Recycled Per Capita in the United States Units Source: Table ES-1, “Understanding Beverage Container Recycling: A Value Chain Assessment Prepared for the Multi-Stakeholder Recovery Project,” Businesses and Environmentalists Allied for Recycling (BEAR), 2002. 191 per capita 490 per capita

20 20Container Recycling Institute 2007 Curbside Recycling has not Curbed Beverage Container Coastal Debris Sources: Ocean Conservancy, U.S. Bureau of the Census, BioCycle. * Note: 2000 curbside access rate is an estimate based on prior year. Estimate

21 21Container Recycling Institute 2007 Beverage Bottle & Can Debris Collected during Coastal & Waterway Cleanups in U.S. Source: CRI calculations based on data from the International Coastal Cleanups 1996, 2998, 2000 & 2004. Note: 2004 data for states that collected more than 5,000 total items CA, CT, FL, GA, HI,IL, IN, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN,MO, NE, NJ, NY, NC, OH, OR, PA, RI, SC, TX, VA, WA, WI, Guam, PR, VI,

22 22Container Recycling Institute 2007 Beverages in throwaway bottles and cans provide a thirsty, on-the-go society a moment of refreshment...

23 23Container Recycling Institute 2007... an eternity of waste!

24 24Container Recycling Institute 2007 Without a refund value, more and more non-carbonated containers will end up as litter in Connecticut!

25 25Container Recycling Institute 2007 Waste News November 24, 2003 Financial Incentives Boost Recycling & Reduce Litter

26 26Container Recycling Institute 2007 Visit us on the web at: www.container-recycling.org and www.bottlebill.org www.container-recycling.orgwww.bottlebill.org www.container-recycling.orgwww.bottlebill.org Container Recycling Institute 1776 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Suite 800 Washington, DC 20036 202-263-0999 FAX: 703.276.9587 Email: container-recycling@container-recycling.orgcontainer-recycling@container-recycling.org CRI is a nonprofit research and public education organization that studies and promotes alternatives for reducing container and packaging waste.


Download ppt "1Container Recycling Institute 2007 Updating the Bottle Bill A Public Forum Hartford, Connecticut March 6, 2007 Pat Franklin Executive Director Container."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google